As we walked down the old main street and looked at the ruins on our visit, I wondered if any other photographs existed of the town in its heyday. Apart from Mark’s discovery of the depot photo, I had not seen any other photos of the old town. That all changed this past week.

Over the weekend I was contacted by Barbara Holloway Smith, a longtime resident of Chappells and relation of the Holloway’s that provided Mark’s depot photo. Though she no longer lives there, her family had been in the area for generations, and she had many photographs and artifacts relating to the town. Over e-mail she graciously shared several photographs of the old town, and gave me permission to share those here along with her story.

First up is a photo of the old railroad trestle over the river next to the Southern Railroad emblem…

I remarked in one of my posts that Chappells had suffered substantially with storms, floods, and fire, and those disasters led to the demise of the town. This is born out in several of the photos that Barbara sent. This next photo shows her grandfather, Dr. “Willie” William Osce Holloway standing in the doorway of his store in Old Chappells when the Saluda River flooded in 1927:

She also sent two photos of the Chappells School, one showing the school damaged by a tornado in 1923…

…and one showing the rebuilt school…

According to Barbara,

The tornado of April 4, 1923 took off the top story of the brick roof and knocked over the big columns out front. One of the teachers was standing in the front door when John Coleman pulled her back from the doorway just before the tornado hit. The school was rebuilt and in the photo, you’ll see the lighter line of brick where it was built back.

The last photo that she sent shows E. L. Cook standing in front of the Farmer’s Bank of Chappells. The bank closed in 1931 after the stock market crash of 1929.

Barbara was also kind enough to share a history of the town which was given as part of a talk she gave to the Newberry and Edgefield Genealogy Societies. I’ve made that history available as a Google Doc, and embedded it below…

Now I want to go back and revisit Chappells. It is a quintessential ghost town, and I appreciate Barbara’s willingness to share its history.

Lived in Chappells for almost two years when my twin sister and I attended the Chappells school. I am looking for a picture of the school. I understand that it no longer exists. Lived there during WW2 and attended 5th and 6th grades there.